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Texts -- The Song of Songs 1:4-17 (NET)

Context
1:4 Draw me after you; let us hurry ! May the king bring me into his bedroom chambers ! The Maidens to the Lover: We will rejoice and delight in you; we will praise your love more than wine . The Beloved to Her Lover: How rightly the young women adore you!
The Country Maiden and the Daughters of Jerusalem
1:5 The Beloved to the Maidens: I am dark but lovely , O maidens of Jerusalem , dark like the tents of Qedar , lovely like the tent curtains of Salmah . 1:6 Do not stare at me because I am dark , for the sun has burned my skin. My brothers were angry with me; they made me the keeper of the vineyards . Alas, my own vineyard I could not keep !
The Shepherd and the Shepherdess
1:7 The Beloved to Her Lover: Tell me, O you whom my heart loves , where do you pasture your sheep? Where do you rest your sheep during the midday heat? Tell me lest I wander around beside the flocks of your companions ! 1:8 The Lover to His Beloved: If you do not know , O most beautiful of women , simply follow the tracks of my flock , and pasture your little lambs beside the tents of the shepherds .
The Beautiful Mare and the Fragrant Myrrh
1:9 The Lover to His Beloved: O my beloved , you are like a mare among Pharaoh’s stallions . 1:10 Your cheeks are beautiful with ornaments ; your neck is lovely with strings of jewels . 1:11 We will make for you gold ornaments studded with silver . 1:12 The Beloved about Her Lover: While the king was at his banqueting table , my nard gave forth its fragrance . 1:13 My beloved is like a fragrant pouch of myrrh spending the night between my breasts . 1:14 My beloved is like a cluster of henna blossoms in the vineyards of En-Gedi .
Mutual Praise and Admiration
1:15 The Lover to His Beloved: Oh , how beautiful you are, my beloved ! Oh , how beautiful you are! Your eyes are like doves ! 1:16 The Beloved to Her Lover: Oh, how handsome you are, my lover ! Oh, how delightful you are! The lush foliage is our canopied bed ; 1:17 the cedars are the beams of our bedroom chamber ; the pines are the rafters of our bedroom.

Pericope

NET
  • Sos 1:5-6 -- The Country Maiden and the Daughters of Jerusalem
  • Sos 1:7-8 -- The Shepherd and the Shepherdess
  • Sos 1:9-14 -- The Beautiful Mare and the Fragrant Myrrh
  • Sos 1:15-17 -- Mutual Praise and Admiration

Bible Dictionary

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Arts

Hymns

(Note: In "active" or "on" condition, the hymns music will be played automatically when mouse hover on a hymns title)
  • [Sos 1:4] And Now, O Father, Mindful Of The Love
  • [Sos 1:4] In Memory Of The Savior’s Love
  • [Sos 1:14] As The Bridegroom To His Chosen

Questions

Resources/Books

Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable)

  • 45:1 The psalmist claimed to be full of joy and inspiration as he composed this song. He said what he did out of a full heart.45:2 To him the king was the greatest man he knew. One evidence of this was his gracious speech for...
  • Many references to Solomon throughout the book confirm the claim of 1:1 that Solomon wrote this book (cf. 1:4-5, 12; 3:7, 9, 11; 6:12; 7:5; 8:11-12; 1 Kings 4:33). He reigned between 971 and 931 B.C.How could Solomon, who had...
  • I. The superscription 1:1II. The courtship 1:2-3:5A. The beginning of love 1:2-111. Longing for the boyfriend 1:2-42. The girl's insecurity 1:5-83. Solomon's praise 1:9-11B. The growth of love 1:12-3:51. Mutual admiration 1:1...
  • As the book begins, the young woman and young man have already met and "fallen in love."In verses 2-4a the girl voices her desire for her boyfriend's physical affection."It is significant to this work that the girl speaks fir...
  • 1:5-6 The young lady felt embarrassed because she had very dark skin as a result of having to tend her family's grapevines. Female courtiers did not work outdoors, so their skin was lighter than women who labored in the field...
  • 1:9-10 Here Solomon reassured his love. Stallions, not mares, pulled chariots. A mare among the best of Pharaoh's stallions would have been desirable to every one of them."A passage from Egyptian literature demonstrates that ...
  • 1:12-14 The Shulammite girl (6:3) described the effect that seeing Solomon had on her as he reclined at his banquet "table."She wore nard (spikenard, "perfume"NASB, NIV; cf. Mark 14:3; John 12:3), which was an ointment that c...
  • Here the refrain marks the end of the section on the courtship (1:2-3:5) as well as the Shulammite's nightmare (3:1-4). Solomon and the Shulammite's patience were about to receive the desired reward. Their marriage was now at...
  • His bride's beauty ravished Solomon. His praise in verses 1 and 7 frames his description of her in verses 1-6.4:1 Women in Solomon's culture did not always wear a veil. Before their wedding they put one on and did not take it...
  • These verses summarize the theme of the book.8:5a Evidently these are the words of the daughters of Jerusalem. The couple is coming up out of the wilderness. The "wilderness"connoted Israel's 40 years of trials to the Jewish ...
  • 8:8-9 These words by the Shulammite's older brothers (cf. 1:6) reveal their desire to prepare her for a proper marriage. Comparing her to a wall may mean that she might use self-restraint and exclude all unwarranted advances ...
  • Isaiah, as a folk singer, sang a parable about a vineyard that compared Israel to a vineyard that Yahweh had planted and from which He legitimately expected to receive fruit.57However, the prophet's original audience did not ...
  • The key to the apostles' successful fulfillment of Jesus' commission was their baptism with and consequent indwelling by the Holy Spirit. Without this divine enablement they would only have been able to follow Jesus' example,...
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